both have a solid, liquid, and gas phase. it's just that to get CO2 in the liquid phase takes a lot of effort and is highly reactive in terms of it quickly evaporates to the preferred state of gaseous CO2.
At -60 degrees Celsius and 1 ATM pressure, carbon dioxide would be in a solid phase. This is because the temperature is below its sublimation point, causing it to directly change from a gas to a solid without passing through the liquid phase.
Frozen carbon dioxide is still carbon dioxide, so it is a physical change.
At 12 atm pressure and -40°C, carbon dioxide is in the solid phase according to the phase diagram. This corresponds to the region of the phase diagram where CO2 exists in the solid state at those specific pressure and temperature conditions.
No, liquid carbon dioxide is not an electrolyte. For a substance to conduct electricity, free moving electric charges must be present. Carbon dioxide is made of neutral CO2 molecules, thus there are no electric charges to conduct the electricity.
Carbon Dioxide can be a solid, liquid or gas. At standard temperature and pressure, it is a gas.
both have a solid, liquid, and gas phase. it's just that to get CO2 in the liquid phase takes a lot of effort and is highly reactive in terms of it quickly evaporates to the preferred state of gaseous CO2.
Carbon dioxide is not energized into glucose during the Dark Phase.
In these conditions carbon dioxide is a gas.
More oxygen than carbon dioxide.
Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide goes from a solid phase to a gaseous phase without becoming a liquid and that transition is called sublimation.
It doesn't exactly "skip" the liquid phase, it's just that at normal atmospheric pressure there IS no liquid phase for carbon dioxide. At higher pressures, it is possible to liquefy carbon dioxide. There's no simplistic explanation for why the triple point pressure for carbon dioxide is higher than around 100 kPa, it just is.
carbon dioxide
The phase diagram for carbon dioxide shows its different states (solid, liquid, gas) at varying pressures and temperatures. At low pressures and temperatures, carbon dioxide is a solid (dry ice). At higher pressures, it can exist as a liquid or gas. The diagram helps understand how carbon dioxide behaves under different conditions.
Carbon has a freezing point of about 3527oC under standard conditions. If you meant carbon dioxide, it freezes from a gas phase ar -78oC Carbon has a freezing point of about 3527oC under standard conditions. If you meant carbon dioxide, it freezes from a gas phase at -78oC
the first limitation is understanding phase diagrams
At -60 degrees Celsius and 1 ATM pressure, carbon dioxide would be in a solid phase. This is because the temperature is below its sublimation point, causing it to directly change from a gas to a solid without passing through the liquid phase.
Frozen carbon dioxide is still carbon dioxide, so it is a physical change.